It's the time of year when people are flocking to their farmer's market seeking out fresh fruits and vegetables for the summer picnic basket. But what about meat for the sandwich? One Rhode Island chef collects all of his ingredients at the farmer's market, including the meat, to make the perfect pork loin sandwich.

Providence chef Matt Jennings' sandwich gets its start down a gravel road, around an old, red barn where a couple of light pink pigs roll in the mud to keep themselves cool in the midday heat.

"For me, if I was a pig," farmer Pat McNiff says, "This is where I'd want to be."

He's got a point. For six months to a year, these pigs get to laze away on about an acre of this small, Rhode Island farm. A couple of them poke around through the tall grass, others nap under a tree. The more industrious ones root around in the dirt for a snack.

"They don't have to pay taxes, they don't have a mortgage to worry about, they don't have to worry about getting fed," McNiff says. "It's a good life."

That good life makes great pork. "That's a happy pig," he says. "See the wagging."

So how can McNiff send these happy, wagging creatures to the slaughterhouse?

"Well, we don't name them," he says. "But also we kind of recognize what they are, what they're going to be in the end. You have to have empathetic detachment, so you have to have this empathy and love for the animal to treat it well to have a great life. But you also have to realize at some point, you're going to say good-bye to it and it's going to become food."

Food for customers like Chef Jennings, who, covered in tattoos, looks more like he runs a rock band than a restaurant. Jennings strolls up at the farmer's market to greet McNiff, who is busy selling meat and eggs.

Jennings is collecting ingredients for his restaurant's lunch special, a pork loin sandwich.

He buys pork loin from McNiff, slides over to the next booth to check out the leafy greens, and then he's off to his restaurant to make a pork loin sandwich. Jennings serves his sandwich on a challah roll with a South American sauce called chimichurri.

To make that chimichurri, he chops a few cloves of garlic and loads it into a mortar and pestle along with some ginger beer vinegar, salt, cumin, cilantro, tarragon, mint, and thyme. He adds a squeeze of lemon juice, and mixes it all up into a thick dark green liquid. He mixes the chimichurri in a bowl with long, thin slices of cabbage.

"A nicely dressed, acidic, glorified coleslaw that we'll use to top that sandwich and help cut the fat," he explains.

After brining and roasting the pork loin, Jennings slices it carefully into thin pieces and stacks it on a roll. He loads the chimichurri slaw and other greens on top of the meat, places the other half of the bun on top, and takes a bite.

"You can tell it's a good sandwich when it runs down your arm," he says. "We got a little bit of that happening here. So I would say success."

So don't forget to bring napkins on your picnic.

Recipe: Matt Jennings' Pork Loin Sandwich With Chimichurri

This is an easy recipe, and a great way to use up that pork loin from the barbeque the night before, or a bunch of ignored herbs in the crisper drawer of your fridge.

If you brine and roast the meat ahead of time, this pork loin and chimichurri slaw sandwich can be made and placed inside your picnic basket in about 20 minutes.

You can make the chimichurri the night before if necessary, or even just a couple hours before you serve the sandwich, to make things easier.

For The Five-Herb Chimichurri

1 cup flat-leaf parsley, coarsely chopped

1/4 cup cilantro, coarsely chopped

1/4 cup tarragon, coarsely chopped

1/4 cup lemon thyme, coarsely chopped

1/4 cup mint, coarsely chopped

2 cloves garlic, coarsely chopped

1 tablespoon red pepper flakes

1 teaspoon cumin, ground

1/2 teaspoon fennel seed, whole

1/2 teaspoon lemon zest, fresh

1 teaspoon lemon juice, fresh squeezed

1/3 cup beer vinegar, although red wine or cider vinegar will do fine

1/2 cup extra-virgin olive oil

Salt and freshly cracked pepper to taste

Place all of the ingredients except the olive oil, salt and pepper into a mortar and pestle. Begin grinding by hand, until the fennel seeds are cracked and the mixture has gone from coarsely chopped consistency to more of a minced consistency. This will take about five or six minutes of hand grinding.

Add a dash of kosher salt and a few turns of a pepper mill. Incorporate well into the mixture by hand grinding a few more times. Add the extra-virgin olive oil and mix to combine.

Blend all ingredients together in the mortar and pestle and set aside to marinate about an hour or two before serving. Stored in a tightly sealed jar, the chimichurri should be usable for almost two weeks.

For The Slaw

Shred one-half of a cored head of cabbage with a sharp knife. Make the cabbage ribbons as fine as you can manually, attempting to achieve a chiffonade.

Next, combine the shaved cabbage with the chimichurri. Incorporate well. Season to taste. Set aside.

For The Sandwich

Thinly slice some chilled, roasted pork loin or tenderloin, so that you have shaved, stackable meat. On a fresh, soft roll (we use a potato brioche), slather a layer of mayonnaise on the bottom half of the roll. On this bottom half, stack the sliced meat — each sandwich should have about a 1/4 pound, or about eight slices of pork.

Next, scoop on a heaping of the chimichurri-marinated cabbage, some spicy greens to top it off — like tat-soi or mustard greens — and serve. Best alongside fresh corn salad and some watermelon shrub to drink.

NPR has not tested this recipe.

Copyright 2013 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Transcript

SCOTT SIMON, HOST:

All this summer, we've been bringing you farm to picnic basket recipes or side dishes, sandwiches, salads and drinks. Today, the quest for what might be the perfect pork loin sandwich. Catherine Welch of Rhode Island Public Radio started at the farm, where the star of this sandwich spends lazy days in a country pasture.

CATHERINE WELCH, BYLINE: Down a gravel road, across an old, red barn a couple of light pink pigs roll in the mud to keep themselves cool in the midday heat.

PAT MCNIFF: For me, if I was a pig, this is where I'd want to be.

WELCH: That's farmer Pat McNiff. He's got a point. For six months to a year, these pigs get to laze away on about an acre of this small Rhode Island farm. A couple of them poke around through the tall grass, others nap under a tree, the more industrious ones root around in the dirt for a snack.

MCNIFF: They don't have to pay taxes or they don't have a mortgage to worry about, they don't have to worry about getting fed. You know, it's a good life.

WELCH: That good life, says McNiff, makes great pork.

(SOUNDBITE OF PIG SNORTING)

MCNIFF: That's a happy pig. You see him, you know, wagging.

WELCH: They're so cute. I've already fallen in love with, like, four of them. How do you take them to the slaughter house? Does it start with not naming them?

MCNIFF: Well, we don't name them, that does start with it. But it's also, like, we kind of recognize what they are, what they're going to be in the end. And, you know, you have to have empathetic detachment so you have to have this empathy and love for the animal to treat it well to have a great life. But you also have to realize at some point that you're going to say goodbye to it and it's going to become food.

WELCH: Food for customers like Providence chef Matt Jennings, who, covered in tattoos, looks more like he runs a rock band than a restaurant. Jennings strolls up to greet McNiff busy selling meat and eggs at the farmer's market.

WELCH: He slides over to the next booth and checks out the leafy greens. Then it's off to his restaurant to make a pork loin sandwich on a challah roll with a south American sauce called chimichurri. Not wanting to wait around with a reporter who'll poke around his kitchen, Jennings has already gone ahead and brined and roasted the pork loin. He pulls it out of the freezer and walks it over to his meat slicer.

JENNINGS: You can do it at home with a really sharp knife. Just watch those fingers.

WELCH: Jennings carefully slices thin pieces off the loin then heads to his work table, chopping a few cloves of garlic, loading it into a mortar and pestle, along with some ginger beer vinegar, salt, cumin, cilantro, tarragon, mint, and thyme. He adds a squeeze of lemon juice, and mixes it all up into a thick dark green liquid. It's a dressing he mixes in a bowl with long, thin slices of cabbage.

JENNINGS: A kind of, like, just nicely dressed, acidic glorified coleslaw to top that sandwich and help cut the fat.

WELCH: Finished with the preparation, Jennings stacks the meat on to the roll, the cabbage onto the meat and immediately after placing the other half of the bun on top, he takes a bite.

JENNINGS: You can tell it's a good sandwich when it runs down your arm. We got a little bit of that happening here. So, I would say success.

WELCH: Don't forget to bring napkins on your picnic. So, if you brine and roast the meat ahead of time, this pork loin and chimichurri slaw sandwich can be made and place inside your picnic basket in about 20 minutes. For NPR News, I'm Catherine Welch in Providence. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.